REAL PEOPLE, REAL ISSUES

October 29, 2008

Obama to visit TV viewers for half hour Wednesday

Sen. Barack Obama is going where millions of voters spend their
evenings - their own living rooms - when he stars in a 30-minute paid
commercial Wednesday night on national TV that will serve as his big
media finale in the 2008 presidential race.The Democrat's unusual coast-to-coast pitch to voters - with a price
tag some have suggested is in the $3 million range - is another
reminder that after two years of campaign ads, events and stump
speeches, even the closing arguments in this campaign are breaking
boundaries.The Obama ad - part biography, part campaign commercial - will be
hard to miss. It will be broadcast locally at 8 p.m. Wednesday on CBS5
- between "Access Hollywood" and "Deal or No Deal" - and also on NBC
affiliate KNTV and BET.This is the first time a major-party presidential candidate has
bought 30 minutes of time for a single commercial on national TV.Michelle Obama, speaking Monday night to Jay Leno on "The Tonight
Show," said it will put her husband "all over the place ... but I don't
know what they're calling it.""This was always a great idea - to make sure that if something bad
happened, if there was an October surprise, you had a place holder
where you could ... deal with a game-changing event," Obama supporter
and fundraiser Wade Randlett said this week. "But in the absence of
that - God willing - you have the opportunity to do what Barack started
yesterday (Monday), which is to bring the process full circle."With just six days until the election and polls showing Obama
leading Sen. John McCain by anywhere from 6 to 14 points in national
polls, Obama supporters like Randlett say the Illinois senator's big
buy on the national media stage is not just a campaign commercial and
is not just targeted at swing states or undecided voters. They say it's
about making an appeal to all Americans about what lies ahead if he
becomes president."What (Obama) said from day one what this campaign was always about,
was to ... put it in context," said Randlett. "This is about bringing
the country together, getting past race and ideology - and getting
ready for the hard work."Bob Gardner, a San Francisco ad man and GOP strategist who helped
create media for Republican President Gerald Ford in 1976, notes that
H. Ross Perot, a Reform Party presidential candidate in 1992, bought
half an hour of TV time to explain to Americans how he would "get under
the hood" and fix the system.He drew as many as 16 million viewers for those televised lectures, which were complete with pointers and charts.But Gardner also notes that as the ad man for Ford, "we did live
30-minute (TV) shows in battleground states in the last 10 days. We
called it "President Ford's Traveling TV Circus."Gardner said that in that election - before cable TV and the
Internet were widespread - the concept was more simple: "You'd go to
Philly and put on a half-hour show with highlights of the campaign. And
the emcee of the show was (former sportscaster and baseball player) Joe
Garagiola," who served as the kind of "Joe the Plumber" everyman of the
era, Gardner noted. "After the filmed highlights, Garagiola would
interview Ford."Obama's effort, Gardner says, can make sense - especially for a campaign that is up in the polls and flush with cash."If you've got it, you might as well flaunt it," Gardner said. "I'm
sure it will focus on his themes. There will be talking heads ... and
'man on the street' interviews, probably with white blue-collar
workers. They'll try to assure these groups that he's acceptable."Unlikely to make an appearance, he predicts, will be some of the
more liberal members of Democratic party, including "(House Speaker)
Nancy Pelosi, (Senate Majority Leader) Harry Reid, (Democratic National
Committee chairman) Howard Dean, (Massachusetts Rep.) Barney Frank or
(Connecticut Sen.) Chris Dodd." They might only remind voters,
especially those in the middle, he said, of the pressures Obama may
face from his own party once elected.Golden Gate University marketing professor MichalStrahilevitz says
that Obama's big show still "has one potential downside ... it reminds
everyone that Obama has a lot more money and that John McCain is
definitely the underdog."Since Obama opted out of the public financing system - leaving him
free to raise and spend money with no limits - the Democrat has held a
decided advantage over McCain, who has had to pull ads from states like
Michigan to stay under his $85 million spending limit.But throughout the campaign, Obama has - in his communications and
"selling" strategy - managed a more consistent and more consistently
reassuring approach than McCain has offered, Strahilevitz said.While Obama has stuck to the economic issues as central, "McCain has muddled his message more," she said."The fact that his emotions seems to go up and down is really an
issue when most Americans ... are scared," she said. "And when you're
scared, you don't want to be around someone who is. You want,
'Everything is going to be OK; we will get through this.' "Author and communications expert Ruth Sherman says Wednesday's
media blitz by Obama could have some voters, especially those who are
facing home foreclosure and tough economic times, wondering, "Why is he
spending all this money? It could look like excess, overkill."But the 30-minute show could also provide an effective platform for
Obama to "show who he is and what his life has been like ... so people
can understand he's not the elite the other side is trying to portray." SOURCE:SFGATE.COM

Comments

Obama to visit TV viewers for half hour Wednesday

Sen. Barack Obama is going where millions of voters spend their
evenings - their own living rooms - when he stars in a 30-minute paid
commercial Wednesday night on national TV that will serve as his big
media finale in the 2008 presidential race.The Democrat's unusual coast-to-coast pitch to voters - with a price
tag some have suggested is in the $3 million range - is another
reminder that after two years of campaign ads, events and stump
speeches, even the closing arguments in this campaign are breaking
boundaries.The Obama ad - part biography, part campaign commercial - will be
hard to miss. It will be broadcast locally at 8 p.m. Wednesday on CBS5
- between "Access Hollywood" and "Deal or No Deal" - and also on NBC
affiliate KNTV and BET.This is the first time a major-party presidential candidate has
bought 30 minutes of time for a single commercial on national TV.Michelle Obama, speaking Monday night to Jay Leno on "The Tonight
Show," said it will put her husband "all over the place ... but I don't
know what they're calling it.""This was always a great idea - to make sure that if something bad
happened, if there was an October surprise, you had a place holder
where you could ... deal with a game-changing event," Obama supporter
and fundraiser Wade Randlett said this week. "But in the absence of
that - God willing - you have the opportunity to do what Barack started
yesterday (Monday), which is to bring the process full circle."With just six days until the election and polls showing Obama
leading Sen. John McCain by anywhere from 6 to 14 points in national
polls, Obama supporters like Randlett say the Illinois senator's big
buy on the national media stage is not just a campaign commercial and
is not just targeted at swing states or undecided voters. They say it's
about making an appeal to all Americans about what lies ahead if he
becomes president."What (Obama) said from day one what this campaign was always about,
was to ... put it in context," said Randlett. "This is about bringing
the country together, getting past race and ideology - and getting
ready for the hard work."Bob Gardner, a San Francisco ad man and GOP strategist who helped
create media for Republican President Gerald Ford in 1976, notes that
H. Ross Perot, a Reform Party presidential candidate in 1992, bought
half an hour of TV time to explain to Americans how he would "get under
the hood" and fix the system.He drew as many as 16 million viewers for those televised lectures, which were complete with pointers and charts.But Gardner also notes that as the ad man for Ford, "we did live
30-minute (TV) shows in battleground states in the last 10 days. We
called it "President Ford's Traveling TV Circus."Gardner said that in that election - before cable TV and the
Internet were widespread - the concept was more simple: "You'd go to
Philly and put on a half-hour show with highlights of the campaign. And
the emcee of the show was (former sportscaster and baseball player) Joe
Garagiola," who served as the kind of "Joe the Plumber" everyman of the
era, Gardner noted. "After the filmed highlights, Garagiola would
interview Ford."Obama's effort, Gardner says, can make sense - especially for a campaign that is up in the polls and flush with cash."If you've got it, you might as well flaunt it," Gardner said. "I'm
sure it will focus on his themes. There will be talking heads ... and
'man on the street' interviews, probably with white blue-collar
workers. They'll try to assure these groups that he's acceptable."Unlikely to make an appearance, he predicts, will be some of the
more liberal members of Democratic party, including "(House Speaker)
Nancy Pelosi, (Senate Majority Leader) Harry Reid, (Democratic National
Committee chairman) Howard Dean, (Massachusetts Rep.) Barney Frank or
(Connecticut Sen.) Chris Dodd." They might only remind voters,
especially those in the middle, he said, of the pressures Obama may
face from his own party once elected.Golden Gate University marketing professor MichalStrahilevitz says
that Obama's big show still "has one potential downside ... it reminds
everyone that Obama has a lot more money and that John McCain is
definitely the underdog."Since Obama opted out of the public financing system - leaving him
free to raise and spend money with no limits - the Democrat has held a
decided advantage over McCain, who has had to pull ads from states like
Michigan to stay under his $85 million spending limit.But throughout the campaign, Obama has - in his communications and
"selling" strategy - managed a more consistent and more consistently
reassuring approach than McCain has offered, Strahilevitz said.While Obama has stuck to the economic issues as central, "McCain has muddled his message more," she said."The fact that his emotions seems to go up and down is really an
issue when most Americans ... are scared," she said. "And when you're
scared, you don't want to be around someone who is. You want,
'Everything is going to be OK; we will get through this.' "Author and communications expert Ruth Sherman says Wednesday's
media blitz by Obama could have some voters, especially those who are
facing home foreclosure and tough economic times, wondering, "Why is he
spending all this money? It could look like excess, overkill."But the 30-minute show could also provide an effective platform for
Obama to "show who he is and what his life has been like ... so people
can understand he's not the elite the other side is trying to portray." SOURCE:SFGATE.COM

September 2012

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